Table 1.
Number of participants who changed and did not change their private moral character judgments under group pressure in studies 1 & 2.
Fig 1.
Mean conformity ratio as a function of moral domains and social norms.
The thick black horizontal line represents the mean with one standard error.
Fig 2.
The example of virtual peer pressure setting in Study 2.
Fig 3.
The example of stimuli presentation in the virtual setting in Study 2.
Fig 4.
The example of the controller and assigned triggers which participants used in the virtual setting in Study 2.
Fig 5.
Mean conformity ratio as a function of moral domains and social norms.
The thick black horizontal line represents the mean with one standard error.
Fig 6.
Mean conformity ratio as a function of the source of social pressure, political orientation, moral domains, and social norms.
The error bars represent one standard error.